Pre-Budget Report: Labour's war on workers

Pre-Budget: Alistair Darling delivers his report in the House of Commons []

Chancellor Alistair Darling unveiled a mini-Budget shocker with a punishing hike in National Insurance.

Millions of households face losing more than £400 a year in a series of swingeingTreasury measures aimed squarely at middle-income earners.

A 0.5 per cent hike in National Insurance Contributions on anyone earning more than £20,000 a year from April 2011 was the centrepiece of Mr Darling’s autumn Pre-Budget Report.

Doubling the rise announced in April, the move will cost the average family an
estimated £310 a year. But in a cynical attempt to escape meltdown at
the polls, the tax assault is delayed until after next year’s General
Election.

Last night the Tories claimed
Labour’s “class war” tactics had been exposed as an all-out assault on
aspiration, while business leaders savaged the move as “madness”.

A
series of measures will squeeze middle-income families, including
scrapping a rise in the inheritance tax threshold and imposing a
digital “phone tax”. Bankers’ bonuses also came under attack in the
“bash the rich” mini-Budget with a windfall levy on payments over
£25,000. And Britain’s six million workers in the public-sector,
including teachers, police, civil servants and local government
officials were hit with a 1 per cent annual pay rise limit for years
ahead.

But the National Insurance hike sparked
the angriest condemnation last night, with critics warning that
increasing employment costs will hamper economic recovery. Senior
Tories described the Pre-Budget Report as “an attack on the many, not
the few”.

Shadow Chancellor George Osborne
said: “This is Labour’s tax on jobs at the worst possible time. Of all
their tax rises, this is the one that the Conservatives will try
hardest to avoid. Our priority must be to stop Labour tax rises on the
millions of working people on average earnings. Now we know what
Labour’s class war means a tax on anyone earning over £20,000.”

Richard
Lambert, director-general of the Confederation of British Industry,
said: “The Chancellor has made a serious mistake imposing an extra jobs
tax at a time when the economic recovery will still be fragile.

“Increasing National Insurance contributions will hold back job creation and growth.”

And Miles Templeman, of the Institute of Directors, said: “A further tax on jobs at a time like this is madness.”

An
estimated 10 million workers will be hit by the National Insurance
hike. An employee earning £30,000 a year will be £90 a year worse off
while someone on £40,000 loses £190.

And the
measure will also hit employers, increasing the cost of taking on more
staff just as the economy is moving towards a fragile recovery.

Mr
Darling announced the surprise National Insurance hike, set to raise an
extra £7billion for the Treasury, during a 50-minute speech to MPs in
the Commons yesterday. He claimed the cash was needed to “protect”
spending on schools, hospitals and the police.

“I
am determined we will protect the improvements in these front-line
services on which millions rely,” he said. “This cannot be done without
a further difficult decision.” People earning less than £20,000 would
be exempt from the hike, he said. But even low earners will be hit, as
the average UK wage is around £23,000 a year. Mr Darling also announced
that the threshold for the 40 per cent higher income tax rate –
currently £37,400 – will be frozen for a second year in a row in
2011-12. It will drag around 70,000 more middle-income workers into the
higher-rate tax bracket.

Matthew Elliott, of
the TaxPayers’ Alliance, said: “It is unbelievable and completely
counter-productive to increase National Insurance while talking about
the need for job creation and economic recovery.

“This
is a huge tax hike on jobs that will put many more people out of work
and condemn the unemployed to continued joblessness.” .